Mound builders
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Miamisburg Mound, the largest conical mound in Ohio, is attributed to the Adena archaeological culture. |
Mound Builder is a general term referring to the
Native North American peoples who constructed various styles of earthen
mounds for burial, residential, and ceremonial purposes. These included
Archaic, and
Woodland period, and
Mississippian period Pre-Columbian cultures.
The term Mound Builder was also applied to an imaginary race believed to have constructed the great earthworks of the
United States, this while Euroamerican racial ideology of the 16th-19th centuries did not recognize that Native Americans were sophisticated enough to construct such monumental architecture. Reference to this alleged race appears in the poem "The Prairies"[
1] by
William Cullen Bryant. This fictional race has also, at times, been identified as the mythical
Nephites,
Lamanites,
Jaredites, some of the
Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, and others. The final blow to the myth that the mounds were not Native American in origin was dealt by an official appointee of the United States Government,
Cyrus Thomas of the
Bureau of American Ethnology. His lengthy report (727 pages, published in 1894) concluded finally that it was the opinion of himself and thus the United States Government that the prehistoric earthworks of the eastern United States were the work of Native Americans. Thomas Jefferson was an early proponent of this view after he excavated a mound and ascertained the continuity of burial practices observed in contemporaneous native populations.
Poverty Point in what is now
Louisiana is a prominent example of early archaic Mound Builder construction from about 2500 BC. While other and earlier Archaic mound centers existed (see
Watson Brake), Poverty Point remains one of the best recognized centers. Throughout the United States, the
Archaic period was followed by the
Woodland period, and moundbuilding continued. Some well understood examples would be the
Adena culture of
Ohio and nearby states, and the subsequent
Hopewell culture known from
Illinois to Ohio and renowned for their geometric earthworks. The Adena and Hopewell were not, however, the only mound building peoples during this time period. There were contemporaneous mound building cultures throughout the Eastern United States. Around 900-1000 AD the
Mississippian culture developed and spread through the Eastern United States, primarily along the river valleys. The location where the Mississippian culture is first clearly developed is located in Illinois, and is referred to today as
Cahokia.
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Occupied between 1250 and 1600 C.E., Mississippi's Emerald Mound is the second-largest ceremonial earthwork in the United States. |
The namesake cultural trait of the Mound Builders was the building of
mounds and other
earthworks. These burial and ceremonial structures were typically flat-topped pyramids or
platform mounds, flat-topped or rounded cones, elongated ridges, and sometimes a variety of other forms. Some mounds took on unusual shapes, such as the outline of cosmologically significant animals. These are known as
effigy mounds. The best known flat-topped pyramidal earthen structure, which is also the largest pre-Columbian earthwork north of Mexico at over 100 feet tall, is
Monk's Mound at Cahokia. The most famous effigy mound,
Serpent Mound in southern Ohio, is 5 feet tall, 20 wide, over 1330 feet long, and shaped as a serpent.
The most complete reference for these earthworks is
Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley, written by
Ephraim G. Squier and Edwin H. Davis and published by the
Smithsonian Institution in
1848. Since a large number of the features they documented have since been destroyed or diminished by farming and development, their surveys, sketches and descriptions are still used by modern archaeologists. A smaller regional study in 1931 by author and archaeologist
Fred Dustin charted and examined the mounds and Ogemaw Earthworks near
Saginaw, Michigan. Archaeological survey and recording of mounds is an ongoing task.
The mound builders included many different
tribal groups and
chiefdoms, probably involving a bewildering array of beliefs and unique cultures, united only by the shared architectural practice of mound construction. This practice, believed to be associated with a cosmology that had a cross-cultural appeal, may indicate common cultural antecedents. The first mound building is an early marker of incipient political and social complexity among the cultures in the Eastern United States.
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Tumulus, Mounds (or barrows) of Europe and Asia
*
Mound Builders of the Eastern Woodlands Photo Galleries*
Lost Race Myth*
LostWorlds.org | An Interactive Museum of the American Indian*
LenaweeHistory.com | Section on the Mound Builders in a reprint of a 1909 history book by The Western Historical Society*
Free ebook of The Mound Builders at
Project Gutenberg* Thomas, Cyrus. Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology. Pp. 3-730. Twelfth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1890-91, by J. W. Powell, Director. XLVIII+742 pp., 42 pls., 344 figs. 1894.